>From: Paul Davis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
>i think you have to define what "checks differences between
>audiofiles" a little more clearly. everything you write afterwards
>makes sense, but there is no context for it.
Sorry, either samples are equal or they are not. That is enough.
The program woul
Kristian Peters <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I think he meant that he wanted to "hear" the results of
> compression. I know that some utilities exists that compare waves of
> the same sample rate and frequency and gives you the differences
> from both amplitudes. So you're able to "hear" what is
> Hello. Is there a software which checks differences between
> audiofiles?
In the mac world, Sound Designer II, a destructive editor, offers two
very useful features; "compare files" and "find peak".
"Compare files" takes two files, inverts the second one, then adds them
together in a separat
On Mon, 11 Mar 2002, Adriaan Pelzer wrote:
> I'd say about 50% of all my editing involves changing the audio files, so I
> usually end up having a working directory like this:
I think that a straight diff (What are the differences between these
files) isn't what you want. You should use someth
On Mon 11 Mar 02 18:19, you wrote:
> There are many examples of uses of CVS for binary files in the Video Game
> Developpement world.
> There is NO good solution to binary files versionning that I know of. For
> exemple Alien Brain doesn't solve any of the issues and they reinvented the
> wheel wi
On Mon 11 Mar 02 17:42, you wrote:
> >There's another huge application for something like adiodiff (or more
> >generic, binary diff)
> >It will enable you to keep track of your adio workings in CVS, while
> > taking advantage of the full advantage of CVS, namely space-saving.
> > Editing on WAV fi
, March 11, 2002 4:42 PM
Subject: Re: [linux-audio-dev] diff for audiofiles?
> >There's another huge application for something like adiodiff (or more
> >generic, binary diff)
> >It will enable you to keep track of your adio workings in CVS, while
taking
> >advantage of t
On Mon, Mar 11, 2002 at 10:42:24 -0500, Paul Davis wrote:
> 1) if you can find one serious example of anyone who uses CVS for
>binary files, i'd love to hear about it
I use cvs to maintain a bigish website, complete with images. It is not
space efficient though. Modern cvs implementations spo
>There's another huge application for something like adiodiff (or more
>generic, binary diff)
>It will enable you to keep track of your adio workings in CVS, while taking
>advantage of the full advantage of CVS, namely space-saving. Editing on WAV
>files can be saved in CVS as a diff from the p
On Mon 11 Mar 02 14:13, you wrote:
> Paul Davis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > >Hello. Is there a software which checks differences between
> > >audiofiles? The software should find largest common segments
> > > from both audiofiles.
> >
> > i think you have to define what "checks differences betw
Paul Davis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >Hello. Is there a software which checks differences between
> >audiofiles? The software should find largest common segments
> > from both audiofiles.
>
> i think you have to define what "checks differences between
> audiofiles" a little more clearly. every
>Hello. Is there a software which checks differences between
>audiofiles? The software should find largest common segments
> from both audiofiles.
i think you have to define what "checks differences between
audiofiles" a little more clearly. everything you write afterwards
makes sense, but there
Hello. Is there a software which checks differences between
audiofiles? The software should find largest common segments
from both audiofiles.
I also need to compare two audiofiles in two separate computers:
instead of transferring the whole audiofile from computer to another,
the software shoul
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